Huge wreck comes near midpoint of NextEra Energy Resources 250

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The bad luck associated with Friday the 13th had a one-week hangover in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series as a massive 12-truck stack-up thinned the 32-truck field in Friday night’s season opener at Daytona International Speedway.
 
Starting off the year on an up note wasn’t in the cards for the unfortunate dozen, all of whom had their high hopes derailed near the halfway point of the NextEra Energy Resources 250. It was the biggest melee in the 100-lap, 250-mile opener, continuing the trend of especially tense, close quarters racing across all three NASCAR national series at Daytona’s Speedweeks.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"It’s just a product of the racing," said Timothy Peters, fifth in last year’s final truck standings but crashed out in 24th place in the 2015 opener. "It’s great racing. Just hope there’ll be enough trucks on the race track to finish."
 
The truck-swallowing conflagration began shortly after Ben Kennedy’s No. 11 truck slowed with damage near the top lane at the end of the backstretch. When the pack stormed past on Lap 49, congestion and a hair-trigger reaction bottled up the single-file scrap among Austin Theriault, Scott Lagasse Jr. and James Buescher, snaring bystanders behind them.
 
A blown tire on Kennedy’s truck, battered from an earlier altercation, forced the second-year driver to limp his Red Horse Racing around the 2.5-mile track. With the pack bearing down on him, he was unable to steer to safety on the apron.
 
"It was either wreck it into the pack or wreck it into the wall, and we had pretty much wreck it into the wall at that point," Kennedy said. "Stinks for these guys, it stinks for (sponsor) Local Motors and that’s not the best way to start the season, but we’ll get them from here."
 
By the time the sparks and smoke died down in Turn 3, Buescher, Peters, Kennedy, John Wes Townley, Ryan Ellis, Spencer Gallagher, Chris Fontaine, Cameron Hayley, Daniel Hemric and Todd Peck had piled in. Theriault and Johnny Sauter also were involved but to a lesser degree. Though several drivers involved made the mandatory trip to the infield care center, all emerged unhurt but with stories of scary views to share.
 
"It was funny. I saw kind of the obvious — cars starting to collide — and then I saw my hood all over my windshield for the rest of it," said Gallagher, who started 10th. "Sadly, there wasn’t much to be done. … This is but a setback. We know what we are and what we’ve got for this year."
 
Said Hayley, a product of the NASCAR Next program: "I was following the 05 of John Wes Townley and all I saw was smoke. Just white smoke and I tried to go to the outside and just couldn’t get there and next thing you know my hood is crunched and I was sideways."

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Former Sprint Cup Series champion’s appeal set for Saturday at noon ET

RELATED: NASCAR’s Official Release | SHR introduces replacement for 500

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR suspended Kurt Busch indefinitely Friday in the wake of a Delaware family court’s findings that "by a preponderance of the evidence" the 36-year-old driver "committed an act of domestic violence" against former girlfriend Patricia Driscoll on Sept. 24, 2014.
 
NASCAR announced that Busch’s punishment was for a behavioral penalty and "actions detrimental to stock car racing following the release today of a supplemental disposition setting forth the findings and conclusions that formed the basis for the Family Court of the State of Delaware’s decision on Monday to issue an Order of Protection from Abuse against him."

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

The decision leaves the former Sprint Cup Series champion on the sidelines for stock-car racing’s most prestigious race, Sunday’s Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway. Regan Smith was named as Busch’s replacement for the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 41 Chevrolet, which was scheduled to start 24th in Sunday’s Great American Race but will drop to the rear of the field because of the driver change.

Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer, made a statement 40 minutes after the decision was announced, taking no questions from the media. He said that Busch has the right to appeal and that the process would be expedited. Late Friday evening, a NASCAR spokesperson confirmed that Busch would contest the ruling.

The appeal hearing is set for Saturday at noon ET.

"NASCAR has made it very clear to our entire membership and the broader industry that any actions of abuse will not be tolerated in the industry," O’Donnell said. "I want to make it clear that any inference that there is a culture or tolerance for this type of behavior is patently false."
 
Rusty Hardin, Busch’s lead attorney, said that the driver’s legal team plans to make an "immediate appeal" of NASCAR’s decision. According to a NASCAR spokesperson, the appeal will take place on Saturday; a three-person panel would hear the appeal from Busch, who cannot have legal representation at such a hearing.
 
"We assure everyone, including NASCAR, that this action against Mr. Busch will turn out to be a travesty of justice, apparent to all, as this story continues to unfold," Hardin said in a statement, adding, "We ask everyone’s patience as this case continues in the court of law and are confident that when the truth is known Mr. Busch will be fully vindicated and back in the driver’s seat."

Stewart-Haas said in a release that Smith, who will have a Saturday news conference at 9:45 a.m. ET (Watch live on NASCAR.com), will remain in the No. 41 Chevy regardless of the outcome of any appeal. Smith, last year’s runner-up in the NASCAR XFINITY Series, was also a Stewart-Haas sub last season for team co-owner Tony Stewart at Watkins Glen International after Stewart was involved in a fatal sprint car incident at a nearby dirt track the night before the Sprint Cup event.

Chevrolet also announced Friday evening that the automaker has cut its ties to Busch. Jim Campbell, Chevrolet vice president of Motorsports and Performance Vehicles, said that the manufacturer "has suspended its relationship with Kurt Busch indefinitely. We will continue to monitor the events surrounding Mr. Busch and are prepared to take additional action if necessary."
 
NASCAR added in its penalty release that Busch "will not be allowed to race or participate in any NASCAR activities until further notice.
 
"Kurt Busch and his Stewart-Haas Racing team are fully aware of our position and why this decision was made. We will continue to respect the process and the timetable of the authorities involved."
 
NASCAR’s ruling comes on the heels of conclusions, released Friday, from Kent County (Delaware) Commissioner David Jones that found Driscoll’s version of what happened inside Busch’s motorcoach that evening at Dover International Speedway was more believable than Busch’s, saying that his "version of the events is implausible, does not make sense and is unlikely to be true given the totality of the other evidence admitted at trial."

According to the civil disposition report, Jones said he believed Busch committed an act of abuse against Driscoll "by manually strangling her by placing his left hand on her throat, while placing his right hand on her chin and face and smashing her head into the wall of his motor home, thereby recklessly placing (Driscoll) in reasonable fear of physical injury."
 
Jones granted Driscoll a protective order Monday. Busch requested that the case be re-opened, but no ruling has been made. The terms of Jones’ conclusion also require Busch "to be evaluated by a licensed mental health professional" and to complete any prescribed plan of treatment.
 
The Dover (Delaware) Police Department completed its investigation of the alleged assault on Jan. 6, putting the case in the hands of the county’s attorney general’s office, which has not decided whether or not Busch will face criminal charges.

Driscoll lauded NASCAR’s decision to take action.
 
"For victims of domestic violence there are no victories,’ " Driscoll said in a statement. "My only hope is that the pain and trauma I suffered through this process will help other victims find their voice. … Today NASCAR took an important step and deserves to be commended. The next steps are to develop a thorough process and policies that reinforce the organization’s position it took today: Domestic violence will not be tolerated in NASCAR."
 
Friday’s announcement marked the third time that Busch — a 25-time winner and the 2004 champion in NASCAR’s top division — has been forced to miss races in the Sprint Cup Series for disciplinary reasons.

In 2005, Roush Fenway Racing severed ties to Busch with two races left in the season after he was cited for reckless driving and became belligerent with Maricopa County (Arizona) sheriff’s deputies during a traffic stop near Phoenix International Raceway, according to police reports. In 2012, NASCAR suspended Busch for one race for "verbal abuse of a media member" during a post-race interview at Dover.
 
Before Friday’s decision, both Stewart-Haas Racing and NASCAR had declined to discipline Busch, with each opting to let the legal process play out. When news of the investigation broke last November while the series was racing at Phoenix, Busch declined comment and SHR spokespersons referred reporters to Busch’s attorney, Rusty Hardin.
 
Team co-owner Gene Haas said in the Phoenix garage that he would not remove Busch as driver of the No. 41 Chevy "until someone else pulls him out." Last Thursday during NASCAR Media Day, Stewart — a three-time champion and the team’s other co-owner — said the organization had a contingency plan in place should the legal process have an unfavorable outcome.

Friday evening, Stewart-Haas Racing executive vice president Joe Custer said in a statement provided by the team that "we understand NASCAR’s position regarding Kurt Busch and accept their decision. We are in the midst of finalizing our plans for the Daytona 500 and we will announce those details as soon as we’re ready."
 
In offseason interviews, Busch said he had no timetable for how long the legal process would take. Last January at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Media Tour, Busch maintained that his testimony was accurate.
 
"It’s a matter of knowing that the truth has been told and we’ll see how things unfold," Busch said Jan. 27. "The process, we have to wait on what their decision’s going to be."
 
NASCAR chairman Brian France said during his season-ending "State of the Sport" address last November that the sanctioning body would react once concrete details in the legal process were complete.
 
"What’s not lost on us by any stretch is the rightful heightened awareness on domestic abuse and violence, and so you can expect our policies to reflect the understandable awareness that that’s not going to be tolerated," France said before the season-ending race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. "The past of how any league might have handled some of this is one thing.  It’s pretty clear when you see what’s happening around the country and in some of the other leagues that our policy will reflect the significance and importance that it should."

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

With new crew chief, JR Motorsports driver looks to defend 2014 Daytona win

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — As last year’s runner-up in the NASCAR XFINITY Series, Regan Smith has only one possible spot to move up the pecking order in the season-long standings. He’ll make that effort by working with new crew chief Jason Burdett, starting a communication process that is more personal than one might think.
 
"We go to the movies, we go to dinner … no, I’m just messing with you," Smith said during a playful moment at last week’s NASCAR Media Day. "We skip through the park together. In all seriousness, we’ve spent quite a bit of time together just at the shop."

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

The imagery, which could’ve been plucked from an online dating commercial, doesn’t quite capture the early semblances of team chemistry for the JR Motorsports No. 7 Chevrolet group. But at the same time, Smith said the getting-to-know-you phase has been an important step in moving forward.
 
"I think the season holds some change," Smith said. "New crew chief, some new guys coming in. We kept most of our team intact other than the crew chief position, so that’s going to be a good thing. I think it holds a strong year and a solid year that needs to be stronger than last year was. That means only one position that we can go from where we were."
 
The 31-year-old veteran’s journey begins with Saturday’s season-opening Alert Today Florida 300 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) at Daytona International Speedway, where Smith is the defending race winner. It marks his third year with JRM, which ran 1-2 in the final XFINITY standings last season, with rookie Chase Elliott hoisting the series title.
 
The opening win wound up being the No. 7 team’s only victory in 2014, prompting JR Motorsports to shuffle the crew chief order, replacing Ryan Pemberton with Burdett, who boasts a history of working on championship-level Sprint Cup Series teams. Though the NASCAR-mandated ban on testing has limited some of the time it takes for a team to become a more cohesive group, Smith said he has little concern about putting the pairing into action for the 33-race long haul.
 
"Our relationship was good before he came to work there, but it’s gotten better since he’s come to JR Motorsports," Smith said. "The more I’ve been around him and seen how he acts with the guys, how he handles the guys, how the guys act with him — it’s gotten me more and more excited about getting down here and just getting everything started."
 
Without testing, Smith has had plenty of off-track developments to keep him busy in the offseason. His wife, Megan, is expecting the couple’s first child — a boy — any day now. For a man who finds comfort driving cars at rapid rate of speed, Smith described the couple’s experience at a birthing class with one word — "terrifying."
 
"I walked out of there, and I’m not going to lie, I got a beer almost immediately," Smith said. "Outside of that, it was good."
 
The other major life adventure of the offseason involved driving of a different sort, a nearly 1,600-mile road trip to Colorado for Thanksgiving with his team boss, Dale Earnhardt Jr. After forging through the night, rain and fog to help move a truck to Smith’s Rocky Mountain home, it left Smith with a better appreciation for their relationship — not to mention a better impersonation of Earnhardt’s trademark North Carolina twang.
 
"I feel like we know quite a bit about each other, just as friends," Smith said. "Yeah, he’s a boss, but he’s a friend, too. Fortunate to have that situation."

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

NASCAR suspended Kurt Busch indefinitely on Friday

RELATED: NASCAR suspends Kurt Busch indefinitely

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Stewart-Haas Racing named Regan Smith as the interim driver for the No. 41 Chevrolet in the season-opening Daytona 500 on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, FOX) in the wake of the suspension of SHR driver Kurt Busch on Friday.

In a team release, the organization says that an interim driver for next weekend’s race at Atlanta Motor Speedway and subsequent races has not been determined.

Earlier in the evening, officials from SHR said that the team was "finalizing our plans" for the Daytona 500.
 
NASCAR announced it has indefinitely suspended the 2004 Sprint Cup Series champion following "the findings and conclusions of the Family Court of the State of Delaware."

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"We understand NASCAR’s position regarding Kurt Busch and accept their decision," SHR executive vice president Joe Custer said. "We are in the midst of finalizing our plans for the Daytona 500 and we will announce those details as soon as we’re ready."
 
Kent Co. (Delaware) family court commissioner David Jones had granted Patricia Driscoll, Busch’s former girlfriend, request for a protective order earlier this week. Driscoll contended that Busch had smashed her head again the wall of his motorhome during a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race weekend at Dover International Speedway in September.
 
Busch, 36, had continued to compete throughout the investigation and hearing. He was scheduled to start 24th in Sunday’s Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway.
 
SHR began the No. 41 team prior to the start of the 2014 season and team co-owner Gene Haas hired Busch as the team’s driver.
 
Busch won once, at Martinsville, and qualified for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. He finished 12th in the series’ final points standings. He is a 25-time winner in the series.

Smith filled in for SHR last summer at Watkins Glen when he subbed for Tony Stewart following Stewart’s involvement in a fatal sprint car accident at a nearby dirt track the night before a Sprint Cup Series event.

Smith finished as the runner-up in the NASCAR XFINITY Series last season and has one Sprint Cup (Darlington in 2011) win in 172 premier series starts.
 
Stewart-Haas Racing also fields Sprint Cup entries for co-owner/driver Stewart, 2014 champion Kevin Harvick and Danica Patrick.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Reigning XFINITY champion looks to balance title run, Sprint Cup slate

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The car looks familiar, and the driver is a year older but otherwise unchanged.

The team that helped carry Chase Elliott to the 2014 NASCAR XFINITY Series title, however, has undergone a major overhaul.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Gone is spreadsheet-wielding crew chief Greg Ives, who can now be seen heading up the efforts of JR Motorsports founder and namesake Dale Earnhardt Jr. in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series.

Likewise, car chief Travis Mack has departed, and has assumed the same duties with Earnhardt Jr.’s No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports outfit.

Veteran crew chief Ernie Cope, who previously handled the organization’s third team that featured several Cup drivers (Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick, Kasey Kahne), is now overseeing the No. 9 team as Elliott begins preparations to defend his series title.

Christopher Allen is the team’s new car chief, while Tristan Smith (lead engineer), Seth Kookier (assistant race engineer) and Rick Pennington (rear end mechanic) are also new to the team. HMS’ Brad Thompson will serve as engine tuner.

"I think it’s kind of like starting over a little bit, I guess, with Ernie and really a whole new group of guys," Elliott, 19, said. "I think there are only two or three of us that are back with the team from last year, and that includes me.

"Last year we worked pretty closely together. We tried to stay on the same page with setup stuff; we were usually very, very similar last year to (their) car and whatever they were running. I think that relationship helped.

"And we got to work with them firsthand at Road America when Greg was at home with his (new) baby. Having that race behind us will hopefully help us get going."

A three-time race winner last season, Elliott is attempting to become only the seventh driver in the history of the series to capture back-to-back titles. His first opportunity to get a leg up on the competition comes here on Saturday with the running of the Alert Today Florida 300 (FOX Sports 1, 3:30 pm ET) at Daytona International Speedway.

The son of NASCAR Hall of Fame member Bill Elliott (himself a champion in NASCAR’s premier series), the younger Elliott admits he’s a long way from being an expert in the series. One season and one championship taught him plenty, but there’s still much more to absorb.

"It still kind of feels new to me; I definitely don’t feel like a veteran, that’s for sure," he said. "It’s crazy to think that it’s already been a year since that first (series) start and that we’re back at Daytona. A year goes by fast.

"I still have a lot to learn, still a lot of new things I’m experiencing, especially with the personnel changes this season."

Elliott’s journey up the racing ladder has been slow and steady by design. He competed in a mixture of ARCA, NASCAR K&N Pro Series and Camping World Truck Series races – and winning on more than one occasion – while filling the racing void with a Late Model effort. That schedule, he said, helped prepare him for the rigors of last year’s 33-race XFINITY Series schedule.

"I can think back to a couple of years ago when we were running Late Model stuff and we ran something in the mid-40s," he said. "The number of (XFINITY) races, that didn’t feel like a ton to me; the biggest difference was just the traveling."

His Late Model efforts were primarily in the Southeast. There were no West Coast trips, or stops in the Midwest.

In addition to defending his series championship, Elliott is also scheduled to make his Sprint Cup Series debut this season. He will drive a fifth car for Hendrick Motorsports in five events before sliding into the group’s No. 24 car in ’16, replacing four-time champion Jeff Gordon.

The five Sprint Cup races are Martinsville (March 29), Richmond (April 25), Charlotte (May 24), Indianapolis (July 26) and Darlington (Sept. 6).

This schedule might be a bit more hectic on those weekends, but it’s something Elliott said he’s eager to attempt.

"The good part about it is that the first race at Martinsville is an off-weekend for the XFINITY Series," he said. "Having that opportunity to just try to get your feet wet a little bit will be a good time to do that – not having going back and forth.

"But at the same time, I’ve always enjoyed running two races a weekend. I can remember from the go-karting days, I used to always run a couple of races. In Late Model races, the weekend where they had their bigger shows, I used to always try to run the Super and the Pro races as well. I’ve always really liked that."

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Noted Wisconsin short-track racer Alan Kulwicki moved to Charlotte in 1984 with nothing but a pickup truck, a self-built race car and the hopes of competing in NASCAR’s highest series. He had no sponsor and a limited budget.

A mechanical engineer by trade, Kulwicki’s understanding of the inner-workings of a car helped him burst onto the scene as the 1986 NASCAR Rookie of the Year with his self-owned AK Racing team.

Throughout his career, Kulwicki received lucrative offers from powerhouse race teams, but insisted on racing for himself. That determination eventually led to his first of five career victories at Phoenix in 1988, and the unveiling of his trademark “Polish Victory Lap,” a celebratory clockwise cool down lap with the driver’s window facing the fans.

RELATED: Alan Kulwicki’s career stats | Members of the Hall of Fame

His signature season was his championship-winning 1992 campaign, where Kulwicki overcame a 278-point deficit with six races remaining to capture the NASCAR premier series title. He had two wins, 11 top fives and 17 top 10s to defeat Bill Elliott by 10 points — at the time, the tightest championship margin in series history.

Kulwicki never got the chance to defend his title, dying in a plane crash in 1993.

Five years after his death, he was named one of NASCAR’s 50 greatest drivers.

ALAN KULWICKI BIO

Born: Dec. 14, 1954
Died: April 1, 1993
Hometown: Greenfield, Wisconsin

Championship
Cup Series:
1992 (driver/owner)

Cup Series Stats
Competed:
1985-93
Starts: 207
Wins: 5
Poles: 24

 

Hershel McGriff exhibited a competitive passion that lasted longer than any driver in NASCAR history.

Born: Dec. 14, 1927
Hometown: Bridal Veil, Oregon

Championship
Pro Series West:
1986

Pro Series West Stats
Competed:
1971-2012
Wins: 37
Poles: 43

His first race was the 1950 Southern 500, in the NASCAR premier series’ sophomore season, at the age of 22. His final NASCAR race was at Sonoma Raceway in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West – in 2012 at the age of 84.

In between: Greatness, and lots of it.

McGriff started 85 races in parts of 28 NASCAR premier series seasons, capturing four wins — all in 1954, when he finished sixth in championship points.

But in what is now known as the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West, McGriff displayed an excellence that made him one of the best drivers in series history.

RELATED: Hershel McGriff’s career stats | Members of the Hall of Fame

Competing in parts of 35 seasons, McGriff won 37 races, good for third on the all-time West Series wins list.

His signature year came in 1986 when he won the series title, part of a string of 10 consecutive seasons with finishes in the top 10 of championship points.

In 1998, McGriff was named one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers.

Harry Hyde was so good, they made a movie about him.

Hyde, who inspired Robert Duvall’s character Harry Hogge in the cinematic classic “Days of Thunder,” enjoyed a nearly three-decade career in NASCAR’s premier series. During that tenure, his incredible leadership skills translated to immense success — even to the greenest of drivers.Prior to guiding Dave Marcis, Neil Bonnett and Geoff Bodine to their first career wins and harnessing the talent of Tim Richmond, Hyde laid a championship foundation with fellow NASCAR Hall of Fame nominee Bobby Isaac.

RELATED: Harry Hyde’s career stats | Members of the Hall of Fame

In 1969, Hyde called the shots for Isaac’s 17-win season, which ranks among the most prolific seasons in the history of the sport. That year, Isaac also won 19 poles, which still stands as a NASCAR premier series record.

Hyde’s crowning achievement came in 1970, when he won the NASCAR premier series championship with Isaac, winning 11 times and capturing 32 top fives in 47 starts.

HARRY HYDE BIO

Born: Jan. 17, 1925
Died: May 13, 1996
Hometown: Brownsville, Kentucky

Championship
Premier: 1970 (crew chief)

Premier Series Crew Chief Stats
Competed:
1966-93
Wins: 56
Poles: 88
Years on Ballot: 10

 

At the very top of the list of all-time NASCAR championships sit two men: NASCAR Hall of Famer Richie Evans … and Mike Stefanik. Each tallied nine in their exemplary careers, with Stefanik’s coming in both the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour and NASCAR K&N Pro Series East.

Born: May 20, 1958
Hometown:
Coventry, Rhode Island

Championships (9)
Modified: 1989, ’91, ’97, ’98, 2001, ’02, ’06
Pro Series East: 1997, ’98

Driving Stats
NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour
Competed: 1985-Present
Starts:
450
Wins:
74
Poles:
48

Seven of his titles came in his primary racing series — the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour. In 2003, he was named one of the Tour’s 10 Greatest Drivers, an obvious choice if there ever was one — Stefanik holds the all-time series record in championships, wins, poles, top fives and top 10s.

RELATED: Mike Stefanik’s career stats | Members of the Hall of Fame

Stefanik won two championships consecutively in NASCAR K&N Pro Series East competition, in 1997-98. That, along with a win total that ties for ninth on the all-time series wins list, earned him a spot on the Top 10 Drivers of the First 25 Years of the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East list in 2011.

In addition, Stefanik spent one full-time season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series — and it was a successful one. He captured the Rookie of the Year Award in 1999.

Nominee for the NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2019

At six feet, six inches tall, Buddy Baker was often called the “Gentle Giant,” however, the nickname “Leadfoot” was more apropos due to the blistering speeds he often achieved during his 33-year career.

Born: Jan. 25, 1941
Died: Aug. 10, 2015
Hometown: Charlotte, North Carolina

Premier Series Stats
Competed: 1959-92
Starts: 699
Wins: 19
Poles: 38

In 1980, the Charlotte, North Carolina, native won the Daytona 500 with an average race speed of 177.602 mph — a track record that still stands. That same year, Baker became the first driver to eclipse the 200-mph mark on a closed course while testing at Talladega Superspeedway. Although he didn’t win at the 2.66-mile superspeedway in 1970, Baker won there four times throughout his stellar career.

RELATED: Buddy Baker’s career stats | Members of the Hall of Fame

In 1979, Baker, the son of NASCAR Hall of Famer Buck Baker, won the inaugural preseason event now known as the Sprint Unlimited.

He earned 19 wins in the premier series, including a victory in the 1970 Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway where he lapped the rest of the field. He also won back-to-back World 600s at Charlotte in 1972-73.

After retiring in 1992, Baker made a successful transition to the television booth as a commentator for The Nashville Network and CBS, and later as a radio co-host on Late Shift and Tradin’ Paint for SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.